Bush marks Katrina anniversary

US President George Bush said the huge job of rebuilding from Hurricane Katrina was just beginning a year after the massive storm, but expressed hope that the $110bn (€85.8m) of help sent from Washington would be enough.

US President George Bush said the huge job of rebuilding from Hurricane Katrina was just beginning a year after the massive storm, but expressed hope that the $110bn (€85.8m) of help sent from Washington would be enough.

Trying to erase the black mark left on his presidency by the administration’s sluggish response to Katrina, Bush yesterday returned to the first scene he saw a year ago of the storm’s devastation.

Standing on a vacant lot in a working class neighbourhood of Biloxi, Mississippi, where trailers and gutted buildings stand next to newly-built homes, Bush pledged the federal government would stand with the region as it rebuilds. It’s a promise viewed with scepticism by victims still reeling from the storm.

“A year ago, I committed our federal government to help you,” Bush said. “I said, ‘We have a duty to help the local people recover and rebuild,’ and I meant what I said.

“Hopefully that’ll work. Hopefully that’s enough,” Bush said after visiting a company that had restarted its business of building and repairing boats. “It’s certainly enough to get us through the next period of time.”

Bush focused on the positive, but acknowledged that much remained to be done.

“It’s an anniversary, but it’s not an end,” Bush said. “Frankly it’s just the beginning.”

Asked how long the rebuilding would take, Bush said: “I would say years, not months. On the other hand, the progress in one year’s time has been remarkable.”

The welcome Bush received in Biloxi was warmer than the one he was expected to get in Louisiana, where recovery efforts have moved much more slowly. The president ended the day in New Orleans, dining at Mother’s Restaurant, a local institution known for its sandwiches and red beans and rice, with Mayor Ray Nagin, Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco and other local leaders. Bush has a half-day of events today – the actual anniversary of Katrina – in New Orleans.

“There is a division over there,” Thomas Patterson, who gave Bush a tour of his new home in Biloxi, said about New Orleans. “There’s not the same division over here.”

When Bush visited Patterson’s neighbourhood right after the storm, the 61-year-old was digging cars out of the muck. Patterson said Bush told him then that he wanted to make sure that people got the aid they needed.

“He hasn’t forgotten it,” said Patterson. “We don’t expect him to pull out his wallet and write a check for us. He personally would do it if he could because he’s a passionate guy.”

When Katrina struck Biloxi, 100-mph-plus winds and a wall of water obliterated a bridge and splintered houses like matchsticks. Water topped rooftops. Entire neighbourhoods were washed away.

Today, seven of the city’s gambling emporiums, which employed 15,000 people before Katrina, have reopened or are close to doing so. Still, just blocks away from the gambling resorts, rebuilding is sparse. It’s a city where buildings still carry spray-painted messages appealing for help from insurance companies.

Bush had lunch at the Biloxi Schooner Seafood Restaurant, where owner Joe Lancon fed the president and other government officials fried shrimp, stuffed crab and gumbo. Lancon reopened the restaurant in the west end of the city after losing two restaurants in Katrina’s 28-foot tidal surge.

Asked if he wanted to rebuild at his original site closer to the water, Lancon replied: “Do I want to? Yes. Am I? I don’t know. The water really kinda has me second-guessing whether I’m going to go back down there.”

“It’s going to take a while for Biloxi to get back to normal,” said Lancon, a native whose grandfather was a shrimp peeler. “I would say maybe five years. It’s a slow building process.”

Nationwide polls give Bush low marks on Katrina. An AP-Ipsos poll earlier this month showed 67 per cent disapproved of his handling of the disaster.

more courts articles

DUP calls for measures to prevent Northern Ireland from becoming 'magnet' for asylum seekers DUP calls for measures to prevent Northern Ireland from becoming 'magnet' for asylum seekers
UK's Illegal Migration Act should be disapplied in Northern Ireland, judge rules UK's Illegal Migration Act should be disapplied in Northern Ireland, judge rules
Former prisoner given indefinite hospital order for killing Irishman in London Former prisoner given indefinite hospital order for killing Irishman in London

More in this section

Armed robbers hit luxury store in Paris reported to be ‘jeweller to the stars’ Armed robbers hit luxury store in Paris reported to be ‘jeweller to the stars’
Aid from new pier off Gaza should be distributed this weekend Aid from new pier off Gaza should be distributed this weekend
Georgia’s president vetoes media law that has provoked weeks of protests Georgia’s president vetoes media law that has provoked weeks of protests
Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited